Request a Quote

Send the details that help your fabrication quote move faster

Requesting a quote goes more smoothly when the project details are clear from the start. Send your drawings, models, quantities, materials, and timing expectations so the scope can be reviewed and the next step can be outlined without guesswork.

Drawing reviewShare part files, quantities, materials, and timing.
No guessworkWe outline the next step based on your project.
Request a Quote at Old Bridge Metal Fabrication with custom fabricated metal parts and project planning
What to send

A stronger quote request starts with the basics clearly defined

Files and reference details

Send drawings, CAD files, PDFs, sketches, reference photos, or sample-part notes that show the current scope of the job.

Material and quantity

List the material, thickness, quantity, finish requirement, and whether the job is a one-off, prototype, or repeat production item.

Timing and critical notes

Share the delivery target, install schedule, or production deadline, plus any fit-critical dimensions or performance needs.

Need help before you submit? Review file format requirements, material options, and lead times.
What happens next

The first review is about scope clarity, not pressure

After your project details are submitted, the first step is to review what has been provided and identify whether anything important is still missing. That might include a material callout, an outdated revision, a missing quantity, or a question about finish or delivery timing.

Once the scope is clear enough, the project can move into a more useful conversation about the next step. That may mean pricing, follow-up questions, or guidance on how to tighten the package before quoting.

Close-up detail supporting request a quote with parts, materials, and fabrication workflow
Fabrication workflow for request a quote from review through production
For better results

Use the quote request as the start of a cleaner fabrication handoff

The strongest RFQs are easy to trace back to one clear revision and one clear scope. They explain what the part is, what metal it uses, how many units are needed, when they are needed, and what surfaces or dimensions matter most.

That clarity supports pricing, but it also supports fabrication quality. Better input usually creates fewer surprises once the job moves into cutting, forming, welding, finishing, or delivery.

Quote request FAQ

Questions that come up before customers hit send

What makes an RFQ complete?

A complete RFQ usually includes the current drawing or model, material, thickness, quantity, finish needs, timeline, and any critical notes.

Can I ask for guidance before every detail is final?

Yes. A clear early package can still move the discussion forward even when some details need review.

What happens after I send a quote request?

The project details are reviewed so the next step can be outlined, whether that means questions, clarification, or quote preparation.

Ready to send the project details?

Share the files, quantities, material notes, finish requirements, and timeline you have today. We will review the scope and outline the next practical step.